Vista Capable Lawsuit Could Cost Microsoft Billions

Microsoft’s Vista Capable marketing program could cost the company billions, according to an economist’s estimate released by the US District court judge hearing the class-action lawsuit against Microsoft. It's interesting to note, however, that the estimated $8.5 billion Microsoft might pay to plaintiffs is dwarfed by the nearly $100 billion Microsoft has earned from Windows Vista.

The lawsuit came about because of Microsoft’s practice of certifying PCs as “Vista Capable PCs” when the PCs were capable of running only the barebones Windows Vista Home Basic, which lacks the more well-known features of the premium Vista versions. Microsoft contests the estimate, saying that the amount it would cost to settle plaintiffs’ claims would cost less. A breakdown of the cost, and an analysis of the marketing campaign, is available at ITWorld.

Discuss this Article 1

Maybe the OEMs should be sued for the "Internet Ready" advertising they did in the 90s. Their version of that phrase was: has an internal modem then it's "Internet Ready".
Since the OEMs were the ones included in this new mess, I think they would need to pay as well.
But I don't think any court would force any company(s) to fork over billions because of mislabeling.

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